If building decentralized financial applications was the motto topic of Ethereal, the ethereum hackathon ETH New York was all about discussing the social impact of such applications.
Speaking to a group of high school students at ETH New York, Mariano Conti â head of smart contracts at the MakerDAO Foundation â asked foundational questions surrounding decentralized financial applications like, âHow do you protect your money?â and âWhat if banks decided you do not own your money?â
âThis whole movement is called decentralized finance,â said Conti. âWeâre going to see a lot of projects being created around that. Itâll hopefully be what my kids are going to use.â
Specifically targeted towards a younger generation, Conti and the MakerDAO teamed up with childrenâs non-profit UNICEF and ethereum startup Bounties Network to create the Surge track at ETH New York.
The Surge track features talks and bounties geared towards educating high-school students about the basic of blockchain. The program runs through topics like âWhat is a smart contract?â and âHow to set up a [crypto] wallet.â
Whatâs more the bounties associated with these sessions were not primarily of a technical nature but rather a creative one. The Surge session hosted by MakerDAO awarded students 5 DAI or about $5 for creating a MakerDAO or DAI internet meme, writing a âshort rap verse about using DAI,â or making a fun hashtag about the application.
MakerDAO presentation at ETH New York. Image taken by Christine Kim.Â
Creating conversations about decentralized finance and blockchain more generally was not only the focus of programming at ETH New York but also the primary focus of several hacking teams this year.
Will Shahda â a self-employed consultant in dapps and smart contracts â along with four other developers hacked together a decentralized application (dapp) to support life insurance on the ethereum blockchain.
Their application, while leveraging blockchain technology, was really about highlighting what Shahda called the present âdystopian level of capitalism where thereâs an insane invasion of privacy.â
âThe best use case for blockchain is privacy. What weâre building calls attention to the permanent immutability of a blockchain and the storage of sensitive and private data on it,â said Shahda. âItâs about creating a conversation.â
Freelance developer Tal Zisckind put together an ethereum wallet application for the visually impaired in order to spark conversation around application accessibility.
âMy dad, he canât use a wallet. Heâs cut off from those services,â said Zisckind. âHeâs not a stupid person. Itâs about building applications to be inclusive for everyone.â
Hacking teams at ETH New York. Image by Christine Kim.Â
ETH New York sponsors awarded those teams that had a strong focus on social impact and the greater good.
âI hope to see applications tackling real world issues,â said Oskar Paolini at blockchain startup TORUS. TORUS sponsored a total of seven different bounties at ETH New York collectively totaling $8,000.
Paolini told CoinDesk:
âIâm sick of your bots, kitties, zombies, your âgotchaâ gamesâ¦Thereâs a lot of games but now itâs about industrial application. Thatâs where market demand is right now.â
To Paoliniâs point, UNICEF France posted a 10 ETH bounty equivalent to roughly $2,300 for hacking teams that built an application to support the accountability and transparency of a real world project called Project Connect.
âWeâre testing the rails of how this would work in the real world and understanding conceptually what way we should approach [blockchain for it,]â said Christina Lomazzo, blockchain lead at UNICEF Innovations. âThis is the first bounties hackathon for Project Connect. Itâs the first time weâre putting the project out to the broader blockchain world.â
Lomazzo said:
âWeâre very much in the mentality that the more ideas, the better, especially in the beginning. Thereâs so many different ways to construct [Project Connect]â¦I think weâre really excited to hear from people and get their contributions.â
UNICEF image by Christine KimÂ